I've saved many discs from warping in supermarkets and general sporting equipment stores. They've had discs in bins in random order several layers deep in whatever position. Some discs were warped before i arrived. In those places i've told the staff that the discs become useless from warping and storing them one layer deep upright helps maintain the discs in new condition. I have not gone that far to arrange discs by group, manufacturer etc. Mostly just putters in one area and the rest elsewhere roughly trying to separate mids from drivers.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

Part of the problem at Discraft vendors, I think, is some of the racks have 2 models each. That may be confusing to the stocker. Then, the putters take up so much room. Instead of storing them, they just put them anywhere.

Variety with out organization is chaos.On my first visit to Marshall Street is was impressed with the variety and depressed with the organization.After 30 minutes of sorting through my favorite molds, I quit and decided I was better off petting the German Shepard, Pierre. IMHO weight is the most important factor in a mold.

Back when I ran events, my CFRs were organized by mold and then by weight.The noobs would pi$$ me off when they would grab a disc and then shove it back in the bin "where-ever".

I just did that yesterday at our mall's Dick's. They only have Innova, but they have enough Aviars and Wraiths to fill a rack each, Enough Beasts to spill over into another rack and another rack taken up by Darts and Grooves. If I could actually find an employee there, I might have told them to try and send some of them back and get some more variety, b/c they had maybe 10 models in the store and several only had 1 or 2.